Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Inheritance

I unravel the skein of lilac mohair
and slip a knot onto the hook,
painstakingly learn from the Youtube clip
how to chain and double crochet.

This wool I weave comes from my grandmother,
a clever woman belittled by her husband.
Working, I sense the solace she found here,
the gashes she knit together, as she stayed and did not leave.

Something delicate forms under my fingers,
like a lacy veil for a sad-eyed bride.
She made me a blanket, once,
strawberry pink, rough, I’ve kept it.

Her losses are not mine. They’re buried
beneath dry pines in Komga * cemetery.
She yellowed, died, in a crumpled bed of rage,
her window opening onto a summer garden, impervious.

But let her passing be a sampler
for the wounded child, watching from the corner.
I link my stitches, swallowing no love
like bile, or poison; craft a small healing.

* small town in the Eastern Cape, SA

Monday, July 12, 2010

From the Lighthouse


The red rail ran rigid around the lighthouse deck.

Below, the sea flurried fierce rocks.

I saw a lone tree, storm survivor, stand severe,

its burnt trunk blackened against the foam.


The guide had warned the group

of danger near the edge,

each adult was to hold the hand of a child.

My son’s grip was a gull’s, longing to fly.


We braced against the cold.

The transparent panes of the huge lamp,

frail-layered in the cloudy light,

belied its powerful night-time pulse,

speaking to ships in the dark.

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Threshold

From the bar at the pier’s end

they saw the moon’s pale hands

splay across the sea as if it were a piano,

phrasing waves into a nocturne.


He held his beer glass

steady on the high counter,

as a breeze blew, and her shawl tassels

fluttered against her mouth.


She’d got a raise, she told him.

He was glad, he said.

She watched the night fisherman

step into the shallows, cast his line.


City lights caught

the crescent of the bay,

completing the regretful curve

of ships leaving harbour.


Along the beach

small ordinary fires

warmed the dark.

Free

I lay full-bodied on the beach

and watched my son front the waves.

Cool sky restrained

the sun, a hoop of yellow.


I saw him run, a sandpiper, past

the bathing area, hammocked

by two lifeguard’s poles, towards

fiercer waters, cross-hatched.


Calling him back, my arm stretched

out into a line of warning

I became my father,

Daedalus, afraid for Icarus.


Still, the wild sea mirrored

a naked boy in me, flying.

Friday, June 4, 2010

Frieze

I swim to see sun settling, clear as feeling,
a snake skin helix on the pool floor.

The apartness of light
animates its pattern.

From under my curving arm
a skylight reveals a dream of water, blue.

If I reached down, there would be nothing to take
but the vision satisfies like sleep, or movement.

Monday, May 24, 2010

Record player

I am a turntable,

needle in the groove.

The records of my history

crackle into the air,

motes of dust dancing down memory.


Black vinyl spins me into being –

a hopeless song sung to win a father,

an angry riff ending nowhere.

Tender chords tremble through a remembered house,

ache of forgiveness that came too late.


I am a pile of album covers,

obsolete, stacked in a corner somewhere.

The imprint of a woman gathering poppies on a cardboard sheath,

Schubert’s lament, my mother’s crimson fears.


I set a ring in whirling motion

track a tune to bring back a time

when his love would have made a difference.

The girl merges with the music.

Friday, May 21, 2010

Chapters

Those long afternoons spent alone
in a house swollen with silences,
I burnt with longing –
touching myself as I read ‘The White Hotel’.
 
Punched by a boy in the gut
when he dared me to kiss him and I did,
hot shame flared.
I lied to the teacher about my tears.
 
The first time he put his hand there,
under the folds of my skirt,
I stared dumbly into the dark
as his breath burst against my earlobe.
 
‘Blue Lagoon’ fuzzy on a small TV, 
and children leering like old men
at the couple making love in the water,
I hid my face beneath a prickly blanket.
 
I wanted what I fought,
we struggled on my cast-iron bed,
breasts exposed and him pushing 
to see what else I would let him do.
 
I learnt I was here on sufferance. 
Men straddle a world where women yield.
It was years before I could relinquish my body
as a gift, let a lover take what I offered.